Brinn wrote:Police action or treating Terrorists as individual criminals has not made a dent in terrorism in the past (9/11 as case in point. Prior to 9/11 terrorism had always been treated as a criminal action rather than a military one). What leads you to believe that this approach will be any more effective going forward? If the militant jihadist is willing to die for his cause what fear does arrest and prosecution hold?
Great points, Brinn. I've been driving all day so I only have enough energy to tackle this one part. Maybe I'll get to the rest later :)
I don't know that police action would work any better. Certainly not the kind we engaged in before 9/11. And I think we were doing a pretty good job in Afganistan before Georgy Boy got all distracted. I saw on the news today that he keeps the pistol Saddam had when we captured him. Oh, he wasn't obsessed...
Anyway - no, arrest and prosecution wouldn't be a deterrent. Why does it need to be? They're willing to die for their cause, there is no deterrent for them. Was the war in Iraq a deterrent? Hell no. Al Qaeda needs to be destroyed, not deterred. That was our #1 priority. Iraq could have waited. Saddam was not a threat to the United States. He was a schoolyard bully and the Middle East was his playground. A third-rate, two-bit dictator, of which there are dozens in this world just as bad as he. I'm glad we got him. But I don't know if it was worth 700 soldier's lives (and counting) and the animosity of the world.
There was another dictator, at least as bad as Saddam, worse in my opinion because he wasn't insane. Slobodon Milosovich. Did we invade Serbia? No. We averted a humanitarian crisis with minimal loss of American lives, pretty low collateral damage (there were some "oopses" though - sorry China), and in the end the Serbian people took care of their own. They suffered one too many rigged elections, took to the streets, and took their country back. And it's still not all roses and sunshine over there - but Slobo is rotting in the Hague and the Serbs can be proud of what they acheived.
But Bush seems to think democracy can be forced on a country at the end of a gun. I say they have to want it badly enough to take it for themselves. Otherwise it will never succeed. And America needs to lead by example, not by force. But instead of taking the moral high ground, we stooped to our enemy's level. Throwing out the Geneva Conventions, abusing and torturing prisoners, lying to our own citizens while taking away their civil rights all in the name of safety. WTF is going on? I want us to be the good guys, not this attempt to out-psycho the psychos.
I hope some of that made sense. I'm about to pass out.
Conformity of purpose will be achieved through mutual satisfaction of requirements.